unbalanced diamond methods
#1
Posted 2020-January-04, 09:52
Given that the 1♦ open may contain a singleton and three cards in a suit, does a 1NT rebid identify that the shortage is in responder's major, or is it used for a support bid or somethig else? If you do not identify a short suit, how would you describe a typical 3-suited hand?
If responder bids your 3 card suit do you raise, or how do you support?
It seems that there are many ways to skin this cat, but I would like to gain an idea of the more common approaches.
#2
Posted 2020-January-06, 01:56
#3
Posted 2020-January-06, 05:07
#4
Posted 2020-January-06, 10:42
I guess my question is who is playing this/recommending this and what advantage do you hope to get from it?
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#5
Posted 2020-January-06, 12:39
fromageGB, on 2020-January-04, 09:52, said:
Many players sloppily describe the typical system with a natural or balanced 1♣ opening and a natural and unbalanced 1♦ opening as one with a balanced 1♣ opening and an unbalanced 1♦ opening. Is that also more or less what you're doing here, or are you literally talking about systems where one is supposed to open something other than 1♣ and 1♦ on one-suiters with 6+ clubs and 0-1 diamonds?
#6
Posted 2020-January-06, 14:26
1♦ is here unbalanced 4+, can have longer clubs. The 1NT rebid shows 6 diamonds, now responder can ask for 3-card support by bidding 2♣. The 2♦ rebid is available as an extra raise.
It does mean that the 2♣ rebid is a bit vague, but in a naturalish system in which you open 1♣ with 4♦5♣ you don't have that problem.
#7
Posted 2020-January-06, 19:36
In the other 1NT is sort of like Gazzilli, showing a strong hand or long diamonds.
#8
Posted 2020-January-07, 05:00
helene_t, on 2020-January-06, 14:26, said:
1♦ is here unbalanced 4+, can have longer clubs. The 1NT rebid shows 6 diamonds, now responder can ask for 3-card support by bidding 2♣. The 2♦ rebid is available as an extra raise.
It does mean that the 2♣ rebid is a bit vague, but in a naturalish system in which you open 1♣ with 4♦5♣ you don't have that problem.
I agree, I liked it a lot. Is this the only system where the inventor probably never played a single board with it IRL but two crazy
George Carlin
#9
Posted 2020-January-07, 08:05
nullve, on 2020-January-06, 12:39, said:
No, I meant what I wrote : 1♦ is long, or has a shortage outside diamonds. 1♣ is long, or is (semi)balanced with no shortage except perhaps in diamonds. This is what I am playing at the moment, where by "long" I mean 6+ cards.
#10
Posted 2020-January-07, 08:06
awm, on 2020-January-06, 10:42, said:
I guess my question is who is playing this/recommending this and what advantage do you hope to get from it?
The 1♦ I am playing, and have for a number of years, contains a shortage somewhere if the hand does not contain 6 diamonds, and diamonds will not be the short suit. Diamonds will be 4+ 90% of the time by this definition, and can be immediately supported as such.
I am playing this because it gives the best base for a 1♣ open with transfer continuations, in that life becomes much simpler when responder knows opener will have at least 2 cards in responder's major. It is also working well on the 1♦ hands, as responder is better able to judge where to go - particularly on weaker hands - when opener has rebid to show his hand type, which by definition has to be single-suited, both minors, or three-suited.
Currently I may not be playing the best continuations, which is why I was looking for advice/experience.
#11
Posted 2020-January-07, 11:05
#12
Posted 2020-January-08, 06:35
1♣-(transfer)
(complete) = 3-card support
1♦-1M
1NT = 3-card support.
You can even play the same 2♣ relay scheme over both, although with some rearrangements; perhaps you can differentiate diamond length in the relay following 1♦.
For instance:
1♣-(transfer)
(complete)-2♣:
2♦=min unbal (2NT asks)
2♥=min bal (2NT invites)
2♠=max unbal (2NT asks)
1♦-1M
1N-2♣
2♦=min unbal 5+ ♦ (often passed. 2NT asks)
2♥=min unbal 4 ♦ (2NT asks)
2♠=max unbal (2NT asks)
George Carlin
#13
Posted 2020-January-09, 09:39
Zelandakh, on 2020-January-07, 11:05, said:
That's interesting, as I had a swapped scheme of a reply of 1♥ as either major, and 1♠ as a relay with any 11+! That worked very well, but it proved too memory-heavy for my one partner who tried it, so it's now simple for all three partners.
#14
Posted 2020-January-09, 09:54
gwnn, on 2020-January-08, 06:35, said:
...1♦-1M
1NT = 3-card support.
...
Thanks, Gwnn, but I think taking up a cheap bid for the 3 card support puts too much pressure on being able to describe the hand for partner to choose the right contract when both parties are minimumish. Still mulling things over.
#15
Posted 2020-January-09, 16:43
fromageGB, on 2020-January-09, 09:54, said:
You could make the same argument re: support doubles
But yes I'd like to say that the presence of 3-card support is the single most important feature of such a well-defined hand (4+ diamonds, no 5cM, no 4-card support, unbalanced) and in my eyes it makes sense to use the one bid, 1NT, that our methods freed up, for this purpose. Just to be a bit of a hater/internet troll:
1) 3-suited, short in partner's suit - what?? 3-suiters are unlikely to begin with, and normally they have a cheap rebid available (1S over 1H or 2C over 1S).
2) transfer rebid, showing clubs - ok that's great but when do I accept the transfer? wouldn't I like to know whether or not my partner has 3 cards in my suit or a stiff? Sure, opener can still show a 3-card fragment, but wouldn't they like to have shown it a round earlier to have one guess less? or to have this sequence show a non-minimum? after a 1NT rebid showing 3-card support by opener, we can always stop in 2M when opener has no extras; now we'll have to guess.
3) part of a transfer rebid method, showing spades - no offence but I won't even comment on this. lol sorry
4) relay - asking what? exactly. First of all, why is an unbalanced hand relaying? And why are we asking a partner who could have anything from xxxx Axxx xx xxx to AKxx AKQxxx Jx x. Good luck relaying with that. It is a simple fact of life that relaying without a known game force is utter nonsense.
Furthermore, the expected value of a 13+, unbalanced, 4+ diamonds hand is still something like 13-16, 5 diamonds with a singleton. The expected value of "4+ hcp, 4+ hearts" is basically undefined. Responder should do the asking, not opener. So 1NT should definitely show something, not ask - and why not show the single most important piece of information that responder is interested in????
5) other - sure but then we're getting into deep waters. But once we're there, maybe we should play switched majors or similar systems. The thing is, unbalanced 1♦ systems are stretching our bridge intuitions, and maybe we should re-structure responder's rebids from the start. I'm sympathetic to the idea of having one of the 1M bids to start a relay sequence, but then definitely responder should be the one doing the asking.
George Carlin
#16
Posted 2020-January-10, 09:41
fromageGB, on 2020-January-07, 08:06, said:
I am playing this because it gives the best base for a 1♣ open with transfer continuations, in that life becomes much simpler when responder knows opener will have at least 2 cards in responder's major. It is also working well on the 1♦ hands, as responder is better able to judge where to go - particularly on weaker hands - when opener has rebid to show his hand type, which by definition has to be single-suited, both minors, or three-suited.
Currently I may not be playing the best continuations, which is why I was looking for advice/experience.
I solve Opener's rebid problems on minimum (= doesn't meet the rule of 25) hands as follows:
1) I open
* 1♣ also on minimum hands with 3154/4054/4144/4153;
* 1♦ also on minimum hands with 0445/1345/1435/1444.
2) I play T-Walsh and a version of switched 1M responses to 1♦ where
1♦-1♥ = "4+ S. May have longer H unless GF";
1♦-1♠ = "4+ H. Less than 4 S unless GF".
Because of 1) and 2) I can now play
1♣-1♦("4+ H"); 1♠ = "4+ S or MIN w/ 31(54)";
1♦-1♥("4+ S"); 1♠ = "4+ H or MIN w/ 13(54)",
which basically solves all Opener's rebid problems on minimum "3-suiters" (including 5m(431)) with shortness in Responder's major.
3) I treat minimum 22(54)/4252 hands as balanced.
4) I play 1N over 1♦-1M as a kind of Gazzilli that together with the natural 2♦ rebid takes care of all remaining minimum hands with clubs and less than 3c support for Responder's shown major. This (almost) frees up the 2♣ rebid, which can now be used to cover all minimum hands with 3c support.
This post has been edited by nullve: 2020-January-10, 11:35
#17
Posted 2020-January-10, 15:14
gwnn, on 2020-January-07, 05:00, said:
Interestingly enough, I think it's all Open (no +) chart legal as long as we meet the 6-board Multi rule...so at a random club game, say. There's a couple of players who complain about my regular system, that I only play it to confuse. No, it's KSU with Keri and NTO for takeout. If you want to see what I play when I do want to confuse, give me a couple weeks!
#18
Posted 2020-January-11, 05:13
gwnn, on 2020-January-09, 16:43, said:
And yes to you, I agree wholeheartedly with practically everything you say in your post, except maybe the choice of this one bid.
1) 3-suited by this definition is not uncommon at all; it is not just a pure {1444} but also a {1345} with a 5 card minor.
The problem with a cheap rebid of 2♣ on a 3-suiter is that it shows only a second suit and there is no way a weakish responder can bid or discover the hearts. After 1NT to show all three suits, responder can bid any of them to play, which is the advantage of that option.
The other problem is that when bidding ♣ as your cheap suit, you will be taken to be the xx55 type of 2-suiter and be completely misleading.
2) I'm thinking responder only accepts the transfer if less than invitational, and is prepared to be passed by a non-strong opener. With better than that, or no fit, responder will make some sort of break.
gwnn said:
Of course, and I thinking opener's second bid should be the transfer to your major, showing 3 only. A
3) I found the idea of this on the web but don't see the purpose myself - I was hoping for a comment by a practitioner.
4) 99% agree. Found this one, too, somewhere. To my way of thinking opener has to describe.
1% disagreement - I think a relay can be useful less than GF. A common example is a non-specific trial bid, another the next step after a "2-under" sort of bid, another the artificial 1♦ 1M methods.
#19
Posted 2020-January-11, 05:26
nullve, on 2020-January-10, 09:41, said:
This is a very neat idea. Unfortunately too complex for me and partners, but something along these lines sounds the right way to go if you can cope with it, restructuring as gwnn said.
#20
Posted 2020-January-11, 11:06
mycroft, on 2020-January-10, 15:14, said:
Out of curiosity, what is "FCVO" and what adaptations did you make? How do the GF relay and other NF (12+?) responses work?